The contracts are collectively valued at £894m, and - based on the government's own G-Cloud spend data - mean AWS will make more money on these three contracts alone than it has during its 10-plus years of participation in G-Cloud, which has seen it accrue £757.7m in sales.
This is because the first iteration of the Cloud Compute framework, Cloud Compute 1, was primarily focused on hyperscale providers such as AWS, and the adoption of the CC2 framework suggests that these providers are favored over G-Cloud for large-scale cloud contracts.
Collection
[
|
...
]